And quiet flows the Don, Deel 1

This story of a group of Cossacks living along the Don river--a primitive, virile, and unbelievably brutal people--centers about Gregor Melekhov, a young Cossack with Turkish blood in his veins. His home life, his unhappy marriage and impassioned love affair, and his military adventures and experiences in the Revolution are told with frank naturalism, from a Bolshevik point of view. Host of other characters crowd the pages of a powerful novel of war and revolution.

Vanuit het boek

Resultaten 1-3 van 16

Pagina 525Kalmikov again jumped up on to the barrel, his handsome form swaying towards
the cossacks. Panting and deathly pale, he spoke of the glory and honour of the
Don, of the historic mission of the cossackry, of the blood •which officers and men
...

Pagina 527For a little way Kalmikov walked along without speaking, biting the end of his
black whisker. His left cheek burned as though it had been scrubbed with a brush
. The passers-by stopped and stared in amazement, whispering to one another.

Pagina 528His face distorted and livid with rage, Bunchuk leapt at Kalmikov and struck him
on the temple. He trampled on the cap that went flying from the officer's head, and
dragged the prisoner towards the dark brick wall of the water-tower. *' Stand up !

LibraryThing Review

Gebruikersrecensie - TheWasp - LibraryThing

Gregor Melekov and his brother Piotra are cossack farmers on the Don River in the village of Tatarsk when WW1 breaks out and young men are sent to war. Civil war follows which sees many cossacks ...Volledige review lezen

LibraryThing Review

Gebruikersrecensie - PilgrimJess - LibraryThing

"He had no cap, nor had he the upper part of his cranium, for it had been cut clean away by a shard of shrapnel. In the empty brain-pan, framed by damp strains of hair, glimmered rose-coloured rain ...Volledige review lezen

Over de auteur (1934)

For decades a pillar of the Soviet literary establishment, Sholokhov owes his stature to And Quiet Flows the Don (1928--40), a four-volume epic of the life and fate of the Don Cossacks in the Revolution and civil war. Although himself a party member, Sholokhov depicts fairly impartially both sides in the conflict between the Reds and the Whites and shows how his hero, Grigory Melekhov, is driven by background and fate from one camp to the other. This realistic novel captures the exotic Cossack milieu superbly, and the whole works on a scale unseen since Tolstoy's War and Peace. Among Sholokhov's later works, Virgin Soil Upturned (1932--60), which deals with the collectivization of agriculture, deserves particular mention; the first volume is far more direct and honest than the much-later second volume. Over the years, Sholokhov's authorship of And Quiet Flows the Don has been questioned, most recently by Solzhenitsyn, but Sholokhov has had strong defenders in both the Soviet Union and the West. His political stance accounts for part of the anger directed against him. Extremely conservative, Sholokhov made vicious attacks on dissidents and the West and, aside from his concern for environmental issues, was a devoted follower of the party line.